Characters

Character Knowledge

Character Knowledge helps you separate what the writer knows from what a character knows, believes, discovers or misunderstands.

Tags: characters, knowledge, secrets, reveals, continuity

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Overview

Knowledge entries record what a character knows, believes, discovers, suspects or misunderstands as the story unfolds. This is vital for mysteries, secrets, betrayals, investigations and any plot where information arrives unevenly.

Use this section before writing decisions, confrontations, reveals or deductions. It helps prevent impossible knowledge, where a character acts on information they have not yet learned.

How To Use It

Review knowledge in story order and open linked scenes when you need to check how the information was gained. Pay attention to whether the entry is about story truth, character belief or reader understanding.

Understanding the Fields

Field What it means Example
Knowledge state How the character relates to the information. Knows, suspects, believes incorrectly, discovers.
Source scene Where the character gains, changes or reveals the knowledge. Beth finds the letter in Chapter 12.
Linked asset or thread The object, clue, secret or plot thread the knowledge concerns. A missing ring, a murder clue, a family secret.
Description The practical writer-facing note about what the character can now think or do. "Beth knows the letter exists but not who wrote it."

Example

Maggie may know that a letter exists before she knows who wrote it. Those are different knowledge states and can drive different choices.

Writer Tip

Readers forgive mystery. They notice impossible knowledge. Track the difference between author truth, character belief and reader awareness carefully.

Common Mistakes

  • Letting a character act on information they have not learned.
  • Recording author-only secrets as character knowledge.
  • Forgetting suspicion, partial knowledge or false belief.
  • Treating all characters as if they know the same reveal at the same time.

Related Guides

Related guides

Initial Relationships

Initial Relationships set the baseline for family ties, friendships, rivalries, secrets and other bonds before later scenes change or reveal them.

Characters

Attribute History

Attribute History records changes such as condition, status, appearance or other traits that matter to continuity.

Characters

Character Details

The Character Details page gathers everything known about one character so you can check continuity, prepare scenes and see how the story has changed them.

Characters

Current Relationships

Current Relationships show where each relationship stands now, based on the initial baseline and later relationship events.

Characters

Reader Initially Knows

Untick this for hidden family ties, secret affairs, concealed identities, false assumptions or delayed reveals.

Characters